Military drills around Taiwan
…and Xi heads to BRICS | August 21, 2023
Dear reader:
“How much trouble is China’s economy in?” asked the Economist last week. A lot, judging by all the headlines in the last few days, for example:
- Bloomberg: The deep problems underlying China’s economy
- The Wall Street Journal: China’s 40-year boom is over. What comes next?
- The Financial Times: China hits the east Asian demographic wall
Given all the negative signals coming from China, it’s hard not to agree with the new conventional wisdom that things are only going to get worse. But that is why it is all the more important to seek other points of view, so I would recommend also perusing a piece published last week by Nicholas R. Lardy of the Peterson Institute for International Economics which begins with this assertion:
A new consensus has emerged among many economists, journalists, and other analysts regarding the current slowdown in the Chinese economy. Their contention is that China’s stumbles in spring 2023 portend a far more serious long-term problem derived from flawed, insular, and Communist Party-controlled policymaking in response to COVID and its aftermath, with likely adverse consequences for the global economy.
That widely popular assessment is likely premature and, at least in part, perhaps simply wrong.
Our Word of the Day is: consensus (共识 gòngshì).
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Jeremy Goldkorn
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